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? ? TRIBUNE INSTITUTE SOCIETY ?FASHIONS PART IV SIX PAGES SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 19. 192? PART IV SIX PAGES Calendar of Gay Events Awaits Fashionable World Two Iforso Shows, Polo Tournaments,, Dances and Long Lis! of Weddings Promise to Keep Members of Society Busy on Return From Summer Homes Most of the members of New York I POfi.it;.- huv.; closed their summer hornos ! at the seashore and inland resorts and ' nre r.ow at their country estates on Long Island, in Westchcster County, . alonj.- the Hudson, over in the Morris town section of New Jersey, at Tuxedo and other places. Life in the country for the next two months is the most : deli?htf'il of -lie year, and many events of every description, polo, horse shows, weddiiigs, dances, etc., have been ar ranged for the entertainment of the fashionable world. The annual horse show in connection i with the Mine?la Fair will be held j Wednesday, Thursday and Friday of thi3 week at Mine?la, L. I., and on October 1 ?i.-i.l 2 the annual borne show of the Piping Rock Club will take place on the club grounds at Locust Valley,' .The fall season will last until Elec? tion Day, ;.;,,| ?on after the premier j at the Metropolitan Opera House and the annual burse Bhow at Madison faqii.iro Warden will usher in New York's social season. The winter promises to ?e ;i g;iy one alie] already many dates for dances for the d?butantes have been arranged. One of the lirst of them will bo a dunce at the Kitz-Carlton Nwembcrfa-tgiven by M r. anel Mrs. Wil? liam H. ?e Haven, of 115 East Fifty thud Street, for their daughter, Miss: Virginia De ?Leven. Mrs Charles Thad- I ueua Terry, of BJ Hast Eightieth Street, I will give a dunce' at the Ritz-Carlton for her daughter, Misa Katherine Hen- i driek Terry, and on December <i Mrs. Ernest iiigelow will give a reception i ?t the Colony Ciub for Miss Cynthia I Bigelow. Mrs. Robert L. Stevens will give a dance at the Ritz December 20 for i her daughter, Miss Mary S. Stevens,' ?nd Mrs. James H. Ottley will introduce nor daughter, Miss Martha Ottley, at ? dance ?et the Kitz December 21, and on the following night a joint affair ?ill bo given by Mrs. Benjamin Clark Fincke and Mrs. James M. Brown at the Kitz for their daughters, Miss i Julia Brown Fiucke and Miss Dorothy | "ouglas Brown. Mrs. Theron R. Strong has selected! Uteamber 14 for a dance which she! *"l give In the Sherry apartment of W? Waldorf-Astoria for her cousin, i ?las Isabella Wood, daughter of Mr. I ?nd Mrs. George E. Wood. Mrs. John 11. Prentice, of 23 East' f'^y-ninth Street, will give a dance at ne Ritz December 28 for Miss Caroline >?? "rentice. Mrs. Henry E. Meeker, of 119 East ? f? y'??Urth Str?t, will give an affair Ha ,^blUal>tes December 23, George j "oubleday one on December 16 and a? n lullt'11 Van Rensselaer Cogswell 0I> December 17. Many Weddings Scheduled On Fall Social Calendar f M,nT wedings are scheduled for the j duL^- 8everal of them will take SSSki ' week' Miss Sall>' Jean Pattit. P, tfr/'Mr. and Mrs. Franklin ton? ?? this dt>'- win be married ?**i 2 ? Sh*ld?n Rogers, son of Ed ,?7 ^.KoKers, of Lee, Mass., director ?? offx-er of the Lee National and W*?m*" Bank of that city, on tta2t,d5? at 4 o'clock in All Angels' bZ%' Vst End Avenue and Eightv tt?. j t . 1,ollow?nK the ceremony; Blltao * reception at the Hotel i Moi?? vCtt,t received her schooling at ? and Vu ?n S*rnin?rv' Washington,! '?filer h? *Vthe Wallcourt School. Her1 th? L i * n ior ?WW prominent in ?od u? ^tate circle? of this city of ArAP *ldent of the Realty Company ?? Wim1Ca' ?Mr- Ro*era is a graduate "* williarag College. ?JjpJtwU Taylor Baldwin, dangh "*?*?.?a* law.*?**?!? Clark B*U-, win jr., will become the bride of Wil? liam Payne Thompson Preston, son of I be late Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Preston, Saturday in St. Mark's Church, Mount Kisco, N. Y. Mrs. William Fahnestock will give a dance Friday at her country place, Girdle Ridge, Katonah, N. Y., for Miss Baldwin and the bridal party. Miss Baldwin has chosen for her mn tion of honor Mrs. Henry Potter Rus? sell, und the other attendants will be Mrs. Allston Flagg. Miss Katherine Em? inent, Miss Jane White, Miss Evelyn Preston, sister of the bridegroom, and Miss Priscilla Baldwin and Miss Phyl? lis Baldwin, sisters of the bride. Jane Baldwin, youngest sister of the bride, will be the flower girl. Jerome Preston will serve as best j man for his brother, and the ushers | will be Joseph Clark Baldwin 2d and ? Alexander T. Baldwin, brothers of the \ liriile; Lewis Thompsein Preston, a1 brother of the bridegroom; W. Payne1 Thompson 2d, 7a cousin; Frederick Stev? ens Allen, Francis II. Cabot jr., Averell Clark, Nathaniel R. Landon, Robert A.: Lovctt, Richard F. Bubcock, Henry B. Cabot jr., Charles Higginson, Homer ; L. Sweetser and H. P. Reynolds. Miss Dorothy Miller To j Become Bride Saturday \ The marriage of Miss Dorothy Miller, daughter of Mrs. Roswell Miller and the late Roswell Miller, formerly pr?s ident of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. | Paul Railroad, to William Harold Stew art, will take place Saturday at the ? country home of the bride's mother at | Millbrook, N. Y. Miss Miller i?'"a sis ter of Roswell Miller, who married Miss i Margaret Carnegie, daughter of the lato Andrew Carnegie. Mrs. Roswell Miller jr. is returning from Scotland to act \ as matron of honor, and the bride's other attendants will be her cousin, j Miss Louise Edgar; Miss Grace Col ! gate, Miss Nina Dearth, Miss Mary ? Edey and Miss Alys McLane, all of j this city; Miss Alice Bremer, of Brook lino, Mass., und Miss Margaret Stew- ! art, a sister of the bridegroom. Courtlnndt Horr will serve as Mr. I Stewart's best man. Mr. Stewart and his bride will live at 122 East Eighty second Street. Another Saturday wedding will be that of Miss Adelaide Sedgwick, daugh? ter of Mrs. Henry Seelgwick, to John Munroc, at Faircroft, the countrv place of the bride's uncle and aunt, Mr. and j Mrs. J. Rich Steers, in Port Chester, ? N*. Y. Guests from this city will leave . on a special train from the Grand Central Terminal at 2:06 o'clock. The marriage of Miss Cleo Robertson, j daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Allan Robertson, of this city, to William Kent Dupr?, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil- ? ; Ham Dupr?, of Portsmouth, Ohio, will i take place Saturday afternoon in the j chapel of St. Thomas's Church. Still another Saturday wedding is j i that of Miss Frances Ruxton, daughter j I of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Ruxton, to William C. Hcppenheimer jr., at Cairn hill, East Hampton. Mrs. A. Wallace Chauncey will be the matron of honor , and Cyril McNear will serve .as best i \ man. Mrs. Allen B. Fenno, daughter of Mr. j and Mrs. George Evans Turnure, will become the bride of George H. Liver more on Saturday at Beaupr?, the j country home of Mr. and Mrs. Tur dure, at Lenox. The marriage of Miss Irene Stewart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William R. i Stewart, of 125 Riverside Drive, to j John R. Alger, also will take place Sat- j urday at the home of the bride'i par i KWe^ I Miss Eleanor West Becomes Bride in Pittsfield Garden Marriage to Perry Melville Shepard Takes Place in the Presence of 300 Amid a Picturesque Setting Special Dispatch to The Tribuna PITTSFIELD, Mass., Sept. 18.?Miss Eleanor Ogden West, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick T. West, of Chicago, was married to Perry Melville Shep? ard of that city in the shrub garden at Court Hill, the country place of Mr. and Mrs. West, this afternoon at 4 o'clock. A company of 300 persons witnessed the ceremony amid a pic? turesque setting on the hill just east of the villa, which is on the farm whore the first courts were established ? 'in Pittsfield, in 1761. The bride, who was given in mar? riage by her father, wore her mother's wedding gown of plain white satin with an old lace veil that belonged to the bride's greataunt, Mrs. J. Y. Scam mon, of Chicago. Mrs. West was Miss Anna S. Ogden, of that city, and first wore the frock moro than thirty years ago. In 1913 it- was the bridal frock of her elder daughter, Miss Fanny Ogden West, upon her marriage to Donald MacPberson, of Chicago. The bride had two attendants, -Mrs. James B. Forgan jr. and Mrs. John H. Root, of Chicago. They wore Nile green georgette, with dark brown vel? vet hats, and carried branches of red barberries. Mrs. West's gown was of heliotrope satin, with hat of tulle to match. Stuart G. Shepard, of Chicago, the bridegroom's brother, was best man, and the ushers were the bride's brother, Mahlon Ogden West, and Bernard Rogers jr., q{ Chicago, and Edwin H. Rushmore, of Hempstead. L. I. The Rev. Dr. Norman Hutton, rector of St. Chrysostom Episcopal Church, Chicago, was assisted in the service by the Rev. Stephen Edwards Keeler jr., rector of St. Stephen's Episcopal Church at Pitt3field. The reception was held in the flower gardens and on the verandas of the villa. Mr. and Mrs. West started on an au? tomobile trip for their honeymoon and will be at home at 999 Lake Shore drive, Chicago, after December 1. The bride drove an ambulance for the American fund for French wounded during the war and spent ten months in France. One day while in the for? ests of Paroi, near Nancy, in the Toul sector, she drove her car over a hid? den mine, which exploded, blowing up the ambulance. She suffered wounds on the cheek from flying glass and on the right knee from shell fragments. The wound has left a scar. Mr. Shep? ard eerved for two years in France with the rank of major. He was grad? uated from Hobart College, Geneva, W. Y? In lOOp. t ISS SANDS is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tucker K. Sands, of Norfolk, Va. Her engagement to Robert B. Roosei'elt jr. was announced a few days ago. Mr. and Mrs. Sands and their daughter have been in town for a few days, staying at the Hotel Lorraine. Miss Cunningham is a niece of Mrs. James H. Dinividdie and is active in entertainments for charity. She was secretary of the Mardi Gras ball given last winter at tlie Ritz-Carlton. Miss Fleitmann will figure prominently in the horse shows at Mine?la and Locust Valley, the former taking place this week and the latter on October 1 and 2. She is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William M. Fleitmann. Miss LaMarehe is a daughter of Mrs. Henry J. LaMaroh?, of 55 East Sixty-fifth Street. Miss Beams is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Melville H. Bca,rns, of Brooklyn. She is engaged to Charles Hedden Toothe, of Madison, N. J. M Tennis Continues to Lead Events at Newport Casino Special Dispatch to The Tribune I NEWPORT, R. L, Sept. 18. -Since the ! I announcement of the completion of the nine-hole golf course on the estate of ' T. Suffern Tailer there are few of the summer colony who have not driven ; to the Ocean Drive to view the links , from the road, and many of them have ; gone over the course to inspect each ? hojc, every one of which is modeled : after that on some famous golf course ; except the last, which is from the plans ' of Seth J. Raynor, who was the winner eif a contest to settle the layout for the final hole. Interest in tennis does not diminish , at the Casino, even though Tom Pettitt, who has had charge of tennis , activities there since their inception more than thirty years ago, left this | week for Boston. Mrs. Lorillard Spen? cer and Mrs. George D. Widener were the winners, of the women's doubles tournament, defeating Miss Helen Mo ran and Miss Alexandra Dolan, 6?3, ! 6?1. Among others who played were i Mrs. Henry G. Gray, Mrs. Howard ? Cuuhing, Mrs. Lewis G. Morris and ! Mrs. Stuart Duncan. Miss Fanny Wickes and H. F. God ! frey jr. were the winners of the prizes 1 offered by Mrs. William P. Burden in the junior mixed eioubles tournament. They defeated Miss Edith Woodward and Whitney de Rham in the final j match, 2?6, 6?1, 6?2. Although the annual golf match for the Count di Turin cup, which has been in competition 6ince 1898, was played nearly three weeks ago, the win? ner was not announced until this week. He was John Russell Pope, who has been spending part of the summer with i his mother-in-law, Mrs. Pembroke Jones. The reason that this year's win i ner of the cup was not announced sooner was due to the custodian of the ; box containing the score cards leaving i the city with the key to the box in ; his pocket. Not until this week was the key shipped baek. The colonists wer? rat in for?a on Wednesday afternoon for the last of the weekly exhibition drills at the ; training station. The honor of the review was accorded the Italian Am? bassador, Baron Romuno Avezzano, who was accompanied by his daughter, ; Miss Yoliindo Avezzano. Mrs. Douglas E. Dismukes, wife of the commanding ; officer of the station, entertained at ! tea following the drill, among the ; guests being Princess Lubomirska, wife of the Polish Minister. Hilltop Inn has virtually closed, but a skeleton force will remain to care for a few guests, among whom is G. | Louis Boissevain, of New York, who continues to come to Newport for the week ends. The year round hotels are still filled, and Indications are that thev will remain so until well into the fall. Dr. and Mrs. Alexander Hamilton Rice, who hav,e been motoring for the last fortnight, have returned to Mira mar. Mrs. Frank K. Sturgis gave a dinner! on Wednesday evening at Faxon Lodge and Mrs. Charles A. Childs gave a children's party on Tuesday afternoon in honor of her granddaughter Jane, daughter of Mr. and Mr?. Paulding Fosdick. Mr. and Mrs. Louis B. McCagg, who | have been out of town, have returned j to their cottage on Gibbs Avenue with ? W. Ogden McCagg, Edward K. McCagg and Miss McCagg. Lewis Cass Ledyard Jr. has been the guest of his father and has been regis-j tered at the Casino. Mrs. Sims, wife of Rear Admiral William S. Sims, entertained* at the1 Naval War College on Thursday after noon in honor of the birthday of Miss : Adelaide Sims. Mrs. King Carley Is returning to Newport next season, her rental of the Booth cottage on Coggeshall Ave- j nue, which she has had this summer, having been announced for 1921, i Reception to Mark Music Festival in Berkshire Region ! Mrs. Frederick S. ?Coolidge invites 500 to Attend! Crowning Society Event otf Season on South Mountain Special Dispatch to The Tribune LENOX, Mass., Sept. 18.?Mrs. Fred- ! erick S. Coolidge's music festival in her temple of music on South Moun? tain, in Pittsneid, the most important society event of the season in the Berkshires, will start next Thursday afternoon and continue through Sat? urday. There will be five concerts by distinguished artists. The feature of I the final entertainment will be the I playing by the Berkshire Quartet of ] the $1.000 prize-winning string quartet! composition by Francesco Malipiero, of Venice, Mrs. Coolidge has issued 500 invita? tions to the festival. She has engag?e! the ballroom of the Maplewood Hotel at Pittsneid for a reception t? the ' visting musicians and their friends on j Saiurday night. Mrs. Edward McEvers Livingston, of j Paris, was the guest of horu>r for: vhom Mrs. William PolloesT gave i luncheons Thursday and to-day at' Holmesdale, in Pittsfleld. Among herj quests were Mrs. George Hall Morgan, Mrs. Frank E. Kernochan, Miss Nancy Craig Wharton, Miss Marie Bramwell, | Miss Adele Kneeland, Miss Mary Aspinwall Tappan, Mrs. S. Parkman Shaw, Mrs. Richard C. Dixey and the j Rev. Latta Griswold. Mrs. Pollock' also gave a large tea and reception at j Holmesdalo on Tuesday for Mrs.*Liv? ingston. Miss Adele Kneeland gave the use of her lawn yesterday afternoon for a repetition of the circus successfully presented on August 25 by the boys at the Berkshire Home for Crippled Chil? dren in Pittsfield, which was founded by Mrs Frederick S. Coolidge. Miss Kate Cary and Mrs. Daniel Paine Griswold were in charge of the per? formance. Miss Kneeland also opened her beautiful gardens to the public during the afternoon. Guests were entertained at many country places during the week. Countess Lazlo Sz?chenyi (Gladys VanderbilO was with Mr. and Mrs. Raymond T. Bi?ker at Hoimwood, Mr. and Mrs. William Sloane end Miss Margaret Sloane, of Mount Kiseo, were with Mr. nnd Mrs. William E. S. Gris? wold at Wyndhurst, and Mrs. Frederic Schenck had Mrs. Edward Motley Pickman. of Boston, at Underledge. Mrs. Oscar Iasigi bought Louis R. Metcalfe's water color, entitled "Bronse and Marble," at the Stock bridge exhibition. It is an interior view of the artist's studios- in New York. Mrs. J. Pi?mont Moraran arrived yesterday at the Red Lion Inn at Stock bridge. Dr. and Mrs. Frank T. Hop? kins, of New York; Mrs. Stuart H. Clark and Miss Marjorie Thayrr, of Boston, also are there. Long List of Engagements Interests Society Folk Among the Betrothals Recently Announced Is That of Miss Virginia Lee Minor Sands, of Norfolk, Va., to Robert Barnwell Roosevelt jr., of Washington More engagements of Importance I have been announced in the last ten days than In any like period in months. With the news of the engagement in ; many cases was announced the date for the marriage, and in nearly every in- ; stance the wedding will take place in ; the fall or early winter. Mr. and Mrs. Tucker K. Sands made ! known a few days ago the engagement of their daughter. Miss Virginia Lee , Minor Sands, of Norfolk, Va., to Robert ! Barnwell Roosevelt jr., of Washington, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Barnwell Roosevelt. Mr. and Mrs. Sands and ! their daughter have been in New York ', for severa! days and have been staying j at the Ifbtel Lorraine. Mr. Roosevelt is a grandson of the late Robert B. Roosevelt, who for several years was United States Minister to Hollanel. His mother, who was Miss Lillio (). Hamer- ! sley, is a daughter of the late Lewis i R. Hamersley. of New York, and Mrs. ! Hamersley, who makes her home with Mr. and Mrs. Roosevelt'in Washington. During the war Mr. Roosevelt jr. served in the navy, with the rank of lieuten? ant. Mr. and Mrs. J. Horacp Harding, of 956 Fifth Avenue, formally announced a few days ago the engagement of their ? daughter, Miss Catherine Harding, to j Lorilltirel Sutfern Tailer. son of T. Suf fern Tailer, of New York and Newport. Miss Harding was ?ntroduceel to society last November at a dance given by her parents at the Ritz-Carlton. She is a sister of Lieutenant Charles B. Hard- ; ing, U. S. A.; William Barclay Harding : and Miss Laura Harding. Miss Hard ing's mother is a daughter of the late Charles D. Barney and a granddaughter i of the late Jay Cook, financier of Civil '? War times. Mr. Tailer's mother was Miss Maude ! Louise Lorillard, daughter of the late ? Pierre Lorillard. She was married to ! Mr. Tailer in 189"t3. She is now the j Hon. Mrs. Cecil Bariig, of London, He ' i.-, a descendant eif Thomas Sutfern and I a grandson of the lute Mr. and Mrs. E. , N. Tailer. Mr. Tailer enlisted in the navy and served two years with the ] rank of ensign. Miss Carroll Is Betrothed To J. T. Johnston Mali Another interesting engagement made [ known last week was that of Miss : Caram3i Carroll, daughter of the late General Howard Carroll and Mrs. Car roll, of Tarrytown and 11 East Eighty sixth Street, to J. T. Johnston Mali, son j of Pierre Mali. Consul Genera! of Bel? gium in New York, and Mrs. Mali, of 8 Fifth Avenue and Plainfield. N. J. The wedding will take place October 16 ! at CarrollclifT, the country home of Mrs. Carroll. Miss Carroll is a graduate of Miss Spence's School and has been active in [ ; welfare work and entertainments given j for charity by the Spence Alumnae. I She also has been one of the most active i workers in the Junior League and hael i much to do with "Musical Milestones," | ! given last winter by the league. Dur ! ing the war she drove an ambulance , | for the Red Cross. Her mother was3 I Miss Caroline Starin, daughter of the ! late John H. Starin. Her father, who i died a few years ago, was widely known j | in New York and Washington as a sol rdier, journalist, author and politician. Mr. Mali is a grandson of John Tay- : j lor Johnston, one of the founders of i the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He j was graduated from Yale in 1915 and ! served in France for two years as an ? officer in the A. E. F. His sister? are i Mrs. David Chester Noyes and Miss I Gertrude Mali, and Henry J. Mali is a I brother. He is a nephew of J. Herbert i Johnston, Mrs. Robert W. De Forest and Mrs. Henry E. Coe. Still another engagement announced j last week was that of Miss Emilie Poaey Kennedy, daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. Kennedy, of 2203 Walnut i Street, Philadelphia, to Julian Tomlin son Bishop, son of Mrs. Bishop and the late Russell T. Bishop, of Bridgeport, Conrr. Mis3 Kenneely was active in Red Cross work during the w:ir, and is a membejr of the Junior League of Philadelphia. Her father was at one time one of the prominent polo playera of the country. Mr. Bishop is a grandson of the late William I). Bishop, of Bridgeport, for? mer president of the New York, New Haven & Hartfonl Railroad, une! a nephew of General Henry A, Bishop, also of Brielgeport. He serve-el during the war us a private in the 22d Infan? try, Fort Thomas, Ky. Mr. Bishop is a "member of the Metropolitan, Chevy Chase and Riding und Driving clubs, of Washington, and of the Yale, New Ye>rk Athletic and Green Meadow Country clubs, of New York. Miss Leila Howard Burden Engaged to L. II. I*. Chap?n Formal announcement was made on Friday of the engagement of Miss Leila Howard Burden, daughter of Mrs. Jo seph Warren Burden, of 100 East Sev- | entieth Street, to L. H. Paul Chnpin. son of Mrs. Lindley Hoffman Chapin. of 33 WeBt Fifty-first Street. Miss Burden was introduced to soiicty three' years ago and immediately took up work with the American Red Cross in which she was actively engaged dur? ing the war in New York und Wash? ington. She also has bee-n active In the Junior League, lie-r brothers are Chester Griswold Burden, who married Miss Eleanor Cotton, and Joseph War? ren Burden, who married Miss Margery K. Maude, daughter of Cyril Ma7.de, the English actor. Mr. <hapin is a grandson of the lato Mrs. George P. Andrews, of N< w YeirK, and a neytiew of Mrs. Henry Tremen heere, of London and New York. He is a graduate of Harvard class '11, and of the Harvard law school three years later, lie entered the army and received a commission as captain in the general stall corps of the A. E. F. For some time he represented the fourth section of the general staff of General Pershing's heaeiquarters at the French general headquarters as well as on the staff of General Foch. Alter the armistice Mr. Chap?n served on the joint secretariat of tho council of five powers il connection with the American Commission to >,e gonate Peace. He is a member of the Union and other clubs. Mrs. Ernest A. Bigelotc jr. To Be Bride of ?i.L. Rogers Captain and Mr?. William R. Sayles early last week formally male know,, the engagement of their daughter, Mrs. Ernest A. Bigelow jr., to Herman Liv? ingston Rogers, son of Mr. and Mrs? Archibald Rogers, of Hyde Park. Mrs. Bigelow was Miss Katharine Moore, daughter of Mrs. Sayles by her first husband, Henry B. Moore. Mr. Bigefo.v died in May, 1019. Mrs. Bigelow is a member of the Colony Club ami served as a nurse with the French arm;, for twp years. Mr. Rogers is a grad? uate of Yale, ciass '14, and served overseas as a major in the 308th Ful] Artillery. He is a member of the Knick erbocker, Racejuet, Tennis and othei clubs. -? Announcement has been made of the engagement of Miss Edith Stevens daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charle Brooks Stevens, of Lowell, Ma.**., te ?John P. Stevens jr., son of Mr. am | Mrs. John P. Stevens, of Plainfield I N. J. Miss Stevens is granddaughte j of General Ade'.bert Ames, cf Lowell : Mass-, and is a great-granddaught* lof General Benjamin F. Butler. M; I Stevens is a grandson of the lat I Horace N. Stevens, of North Andover.